Kshartle wrote:
They are occuring right now. Look at the economy. Look at the FEDs actions. Why are they still printing, and printing at a faster annual rate than when they started? Prices of financial assets and homes are higher but the economy is not better. If QE worked shouldn't we have seen that by now? They've been doing it for years. Do they just need to increase it and then it will work? That's what Krugman is pushing for and I suspect that's what they'll do.
Just to make sure we are on the same page, I don't think that QE is a good idea, or that it "works" in any way. I'm just trying to understand what QE
is, and its likely effects.
I don't know when consumer prices are going to take off. Hopefully never. The alternative is a crash in the financial markets if the money supply increase rate stays stable or falls over any significant period though. That's what we need to fix the economy. It will suck but sometimes you have to take the pain for the eventual gain. Printing money to improve the economy is trying to get something for nothing. You can't get something from nothing.
If the government was printing money and it was showing up in any part of my economic life (i.e., my wages or the average prices I paid for the things I buy) I would agree with you.
I also agree that you can't get something for nothing, unless you happen to think of nothing as something like a Buddhist monk might. He might argue that he gets something for nothing from the universe every moment.
It's impossible to guess the future exactly but I think we will start seeing annual consumer goods price increases by 5-10% annualy perhaps as soon as 2015, maybe even next year. That is if they do what I think they're going to do and up the QE over 100 billion a month in the face of a shrinking labor force.
Why is the labor force shrinking? I thought that there were a lot more people looking for jobs than there were jobs available--i.e., we currently have excess productive capacity, especially when it comes to labor.